释义 |
Polack; Polak noun a Polish immigrant or a Polish-American US, 1898 Disparaging.- Kate hurriedly intervened to remark that she hoped she would be transferred to a school in a better neighborhood, because now she had to teach dirty Polacks who would never be any good for anything[.] — James T. Farrell, Saturday Night, p. 8, 1947
- It’s just like I’m really only a Polak, just a damn Polak millhand! — John Clellon Holmes, Go, p. 151, 1952
- Come on, you yellow-bellied Polack bas- — West Side Story, 1957
- Eat your last can of sauerkraut, Polack, because one of us has to die unless Mister Gregory and his people get out of solitary. — Dick Gregory, Nigger, p. 195, 1964
- a nice dumb polack who maybe has that extra something that makes for stardom. — Gore Vidal, Myra Breckinridge, p. 25, 1968
- A Polack’s day, my father has suggested to me, isn’t complete until he has dragged his big dumb feet across the bones of a Jew. — Philip Roth, Portnoy’s Complaint, p. 142, 1969
- Every Polack in the place is drinking Seven Crown and Strohs. — Elmore Leonard, The Big Bounce, p. 48, 1969
- Agnew has pointed out that it’s a land of opportunity for anyone, whether he’s a Mick, a Polack or a Jap. — Playboy, p. 62, February 1969
- He finally confessed to himself that he was nothing but a dumb Polack and he might as well lie back and enjoy it. — Darryl Ponicsan, The Last Detail, p. 11, 1970
- In the locker rooms of the Eighteenth District Station and around the cop bars, he called Italians guidos or wops, Poles polacks, Bohemians hunkies, Mexicans spicks or greasers, and African-Americans niggers or darkies. — Robert Campbell, Boneyards, p. 10, 1992
- a whining old bag with a Boston accent who starts ranting about Niggers, Kikes, Spics, Wops, Dagos, and Polacks. — Howard Stern, Miss America, p. 220, 1995
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